The long-running legal battle between the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS)—recently rebranded as the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS)—and the Bayelsa State Government is heading to its final showdown at the apex court.
The Supreme Court has officially fixed July 27, 2026, to deliver its highly anticipated judgment on an appeal filed by the federal tax agency. The case centers on a staggering ₦5.5 billion revenue dispute that has strained fiscal relations between the federal regulator and the sub-national government.
The Genesis of the Multi-Billion Naira Fight
The NRS is scrambling to overturn two previous losses at both the Federal High Court and the Court of Appeal. Both lower courts had fiercely ruled against the federal agency, ordering it to immediately refund the ₦5.5 billion to the Bayelsa State Revenue Service.
According to court documents, the Bayelsa State Government insists that the apex tax regulator wrongfully collected and unlawfully withheld the massive sum, which legitimately belongs to the state’s coffers.
AGF Moves to Rescue Federal Agency
Refusing to back down, the Federal Government has deployed its heavy hitters. The Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, is personally leading the federal legal team at the Supreme Court. Fagbemi is strongly urging the apex court justices to completely quash the lower courts’ judgments, arguing that the NRS acted within its legal bounds.
High Stakes Amid Record Revenue Drive
This legal firestorm comes at a time when the NRS is under immense pressure to fund the national budget. Under the administration of President Bola Tinubu, the agency has recorded a spectacular performance, raking in an unprecedented ₦7.44 trillion in tax revenue in the first quarter of 2026 alone.
However, experts point out that despite its massive success at the forefront of Nigeria’s revenue generation drive, the NRS is increasingly finding itself entangled in civil and criminal disputes over tax defaults and jurisdictional boundaries with individuals, corporate organizations, and state governments.
The July 27 verdict by the Supreme Court is expected to set a critical legal precedent on how taxes are shared and contested between the federal government and states moving forward.
What is your take on this? Should the Federal Government refund Bayelsa State, or should the NRS hold onto the cash to drive national development? Drop your thoughts below!
#TaxDispute #FIRS #NRS #BayelsaState #SupremeCourt #NigeriaEconomy #Nairametrics #BusinessNews
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